Sophia Wiesböck will do her BSc thesis on the importance of fCover and Lidar data to explain home range sizes of red deer in the Nationalpark Bavarian Forest. Sophia will compute fCover on different spatial resolutions using different data sets and make it comparable with Lidar data. This will allow us to analyse the explanatory power of these data sets for home ranges of different red deer individuals in the Nationalpark. This thesis is supervised by Benjamin Leutner, Mirjana Bevanda and Martin Wegmann in close cooperation with the science department of the Nationalpark, Jörg Müller.
A Decade of Climate Research and Capacity Building in West Africa – Insights from WASCAL
Our colleagues Sarah Schönbrodt-Stitt and Michael Thiel, together with partners from University of Halle-Wittenberg, University of Bonn and WASCAL, published a new article. Climate change poses significant challenges to Africa, particularly West Africa, where...